List of EPS Board Candidates for 2025/2026

At this year’s EuroPython Society General Assembly (GA), planned for Wednesday, December 17th, 2025, 20:00 CET, we will vote in a new board of the EuroPython Society for the term 2025/2026

List of Board Candidates

The EPS bylaws require one chair, one vice chair and 2 - 7 board members. The following candidates have stated their willingness to work on the EPS board. We are presenting them here (in alphabetical order by first name).

The following fine folks have expressed their desire to run for the next EPS board elections: Angel Ramboi, Aris Nivorils, Artur Czepiel, Ege Akman, Mia Bajić, Yulia Barabash.

Angel Ramboi

Engineer / Gamer / Geek / Wanderer

Hello everyone! My name is Angel, I’m a seasoned engineer with more than 20 years experience designing and building software and web apps. My current role doesn't involve much coding these days, still Python and its community is where my heart is. ☺️

My first EuroPython was in Florence 2012 where I was blown away by the amazing people gathered around the conference and the language. It was like nothing I've ever experienced before and the energy was palpable ... I was hooked!

Since then I've attended many EuroPythons, I was board member for the 2020 edition (briefly), an active on-site volunteer in 2019 and 2023, and joined the awesome Sponsors team for Prague 2024.

As a board member, one of my focus areas will be optimizing processes with the aim to make the organizing experience less stressful for the people involved, and whatever else is needed of me of course. Also bringing in positive vibes and fresh energy to every meeting. 🤩

Looking forward to an amazing conference next year. 🚀

Aris Nivorlis

Geoscientist / Data Steward / Pythonista

Aris is a geophysicist and data steward at Deltares, where he leverages data and tooling to tackle complex subsurface challenges. He’s passionate about promoting sustainable and reproducible scientific coding practices, and he actively contributes to the European Python community through conferences and initiatives.

Aris has been involved with EPS for the past two years; first as Ops Team Lead (2024) and currently as a board member (2025). He is the Chair of PyCon Sweden and has been a core organizer for the past four conferences. Aris is running for the EuroPython Society (EPS) Board to continue working in shaping its future direction.

He is particularly interested in how EPS can further support local Python communities, events, and projects, while ensuring the success of the EuroPython conference. Aris aims to build on the efforts from previous years toward a more independent and sustainable organisation team for EuroPython. One of his key goals is to lower the barriers for others to get involved as volunteers, organizers, and board members, fostering a more inclusive and accessible society.

Artur Czepiel (nomination for Chair)

Software developer

I’m a Software Developer based in Poland. I attended my first EuroPython in 2016, joined the organising team after the 2017 conference, and have since served five terms on the EPS Board, two of them as Chair.

Over the years, I have contributed to various parts of the Conference and the Society, including infrastructure, programme, community outreach, and most of the financial spreadsheets 🙂

My main focus for next year would be to set up a local presence at the EP2026 location (on the fiscal, legal, and community sides), improve our internal processes around financial aid and reimbursements, and continue infrastructure upgrades. As a bonus goal, I would like to lay the groundwork for a Fiscal Sponsorship programme.

Ege Akman

Pythonista / Open Source Advocate / Student

I started using Python in 2019 and since then I’ve tried to give back to the communities that shaped me, including starting the Python in Turkish documentation effort in 2021 with Python Turkey. I discovered EuroPython in 2023, was genuinely moved by how much people pour into it, and wanted to help make that kind of community possible for others too.

Over the past year on the EPS Board, I focused on removing blockers and making progress more feasible. On infrastructure, I helped migrate the old website setup to a more maintainable structure (with static content now on static.europython.eu) and back-ported the Program API for the last four EuroPython editions so historical data is available again. Alongside this, I supported core conference operations (volunteers, website updates), helped run the grants program in the second half of the year, and represented EPS at multiple community events.

Later in the year, I coordinated with the CPython core team to bring the Language Summit to EuroPython 2026 (still ongoing, and super excited for it!!), and I contributed to the 2026 venue selection discussions, with most of the work carried by our amazing venue team ❤️. Also, stay tuned for a conference companion app this year; it’s coming soon!

It was a year with ups and downs, and at times it was mentally and emotionally difficult, but I’m proud of what we delivered and grateful for the people I worked with. This year also made me much more conscious of the culture I want to help strengthen within the EPS: one grounded in trust, openness, kindness, and care for the people who make this community possible. I feel clearer than ever about my North Star, and I’m ready to work hard to live it and help it grow.

With the experience I have now, I expect to deliver more by strengthening student involvement through collaborations with organizations like AIESEC (stay tuned!), supporting volunteers more sustainably, continuing to improve our infrastructure, and helping the Board make progress without burning people out.

Mia Bajić (Nomination for Vice Chair)

Software Engineer & Community Events Organizer

I’m a software engineer and community events organizer. Since joining the Python community in 2021, I’ve led Python Pyvo meetups in Prague, brought Python Pizza to the Czech Republic, contributed to PyCon CZ 23 as well as EuroPython 2023 and 2024, and served as Vice-Chair of the EuroPython Society in 2025.

I’ve spoken on technical topics at major conferences, including PyCon US, DjangoCon, FOSDEM, EuroPython, and many other PyCons across Europe.

I’ve shared a reflection on the past year on my blog, including what went well, what I learned, and some ideas for the year ahead. If you’d like to check it out, you can find it here: https://clytaemnestra.github.io/tech-blog/eps-reflection

I’d like to continue working on the topics that are relevant for the next year: hiring a second event manager, improving our fiscal processes, and strengthening our relationships with European communities.

Yuliia Barabash

Over the past two years, I have been involved in EuroPython as part of the programme organisation team and general conference support. In particular, I have helped with the CFP and talk selection process, schedule preparation, and communication with speakers. Through this work I have gained a good understanding of how EuroPython operates, and the expectations of our community.

In the next Board term, I would like to continue contributing to the programme team, while also taking a stronger role in infrastructure topics. My main focus areas would be:

  • Community voting: improving and maintaining the systems we use for voting (e.g. for programme selection or community decisions) to make them more reliable, transparent, and pleasant to use.
  • Infrastructure and automation: helping to modernise, deploy, and automate core pieces of our conference infrastructure.

I care a lot about EuroPython as a welcoming, community-driven conference and would be happy to support it at Board level, working collaboratively with the rest of the Board and organisers.


What does the EPS Board do ?

The EPS board is made up of up to 9 directors (including 1 chair and 1 vice chair); the board runs the day-to-day business of the EuroPython Society, including running the EuroPython conference series, and supports the community through various initiatives such as our grants programme. The board collectively takes up the fiscal and legal responsibility of the Society.

For more details you can check our previous post here: https://europython-society.org/general-assembly-2025/#what-does-the-board-do

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